Just finished migrating Decker's Heaven from Manjaro Linux (Arch
Linux fork), to CentOS 7 with seemingly awesome results.
FTN works, all that's left to test is QWKnet. :)
I see your message here. :)
By the way, what FTN mailer are you using in Linux?
By the way, what FTN mailer are you using in Linux?
BinkD 1.0.x. If you're running Ubuntu (maybe Debian), I think
there's already a package for it in the standard repos. Arch, it's
in AUR, any other distro, you have to build yourself which is what I
did for CentOS 7, made a full Source RPM and compiled that into an
RPM binary package, if'n you need. :)
Interesting, for some reason I thought BinkD was fairly old and wasn't being maintained anymore. Currently on my BBS machine I have Mint Linux installed, which is based on Debian - so it sounds like there may already be a package for BinkD.
Re: Confirming Link
By: Psi-Jack to Nightfox on Fri Jul 17 2015 00:45:20
Interesting, for some reason I thought BinkD was fairly old and
wasn't being maintained anymore. Currently on my BBS machine I have
Mint Linux installed, which is based on Debian - so it sounds like
there may already be a package for BinkD.
Nope. BinkD is constantly being maintained, in the 1.1.x series
which is the "unstable" branch, however supposedly pretty dang
stable.
That's cool. If I move my Synchronet setup over to Linux, I suppose I'll have to remember to check out BinkD.
By the way, what FTN mailer are you using in Linux?
BinkD 1.0.x. If you're running Ubuntu (maybe Debian), I think
there's already a package for it in the standard repos. Arch, it's
in AUR, any other distro, you have to build yourself which is what
I did for CentOS 7, made a full Source RPM and compiled that into
an RPM binary package, if'n you need. :)
I run Mint and install BinkD from the package. Seems to work well if I dont screw up the config. :)
Heh.. Yeah, Linux Mint just uses Ubuntu repositories plus their own
repositories overlapping some of Ubuntu's to include their
customizations, and their.... Other software.. *cough*Cinnamon*cough*.
;)
I actually like Cinnamon. It feels like a clean and simple UI and more of what I expect (or perhaps more of what I'm used to). I don't like the Unity UI that Ubuntu currently uses by default. I've found that Cinnamon can easily be installed in Ubuntu though - I have a Ubuntu system I've used at work that I've installed Cinnamon on, and I was happily surprised to see that Cinnamon was available on distros other than Mint.
To me, Cinnamon is bastardized Gnome 3. They took the good parts of
Gnome 3 and ripped them out and broke it. Specifically things like
per-display virtual dynamic desktops. In Cinnamon, it's now all one
long screen, instead of per screen.
They improved in other areas, I will give them that, but in the
process, they broke what was actually the best feature of Gnome 3.
:)
I've heard that Cinnamon started as a fork of Gnome 2, so that sort of makes sense. So I don't think it's that they "broke" Gnome 3, but rather providing something that some people want. With Gnome 3, I feel like they completely re-did the interface and made it worse. It reminds me somewhat of what Microsoft did with Windows 8 and its new interface - It seems like with Gnome 3, they wanted to make some kind of tablet-esque interface, which isn't what I want on a desktop.
I've heard that Cinnamon started as a fork of Gnome 2, so that sort
of makes sense. So I don't think it's that they "broke" Gnome 3, but
rather
I guess I had heard or remembered incorrectly. I was just doing some researching and read that Cinnamon is actually a fork of Gnome 3, not Gnome 2.
I dunno. I used to utterly hate Gnome 3 when it first came out.
Course, mind you, I hated Gnome in general, never liked Gnome 1 nor
2. I've been a KDE person a long time for a reason (and still am).
A long time ago (around 2000-ish), I remember reading that one of the goals of KDE was to sort of mimic Windows, to make it easier for Windows users to migrate to Linux. Since I was curious to look into alternatives to Windows, I didn't really like the idea of using something that was supposed to be similar to Windows. Thus, I have avoided using KDE. I don't know if KDE abandoned that original goal of being similar to Windows, but from the occasional times I've used KDE and KDE-based apps, it seems like KDE is decent.
Now, I had a person from Gnome's PR team, after my constant
expression of hatred of it, come to me and told me idealisms behind
why they did their design like they did. I forget exactly what they
all were, but they made.... sense... All of it. He said, try it
again for 2 weeks with that mentality in play, and come back and
tell me what you think... Sure enough... I loved it after that 2
weeks, and I actually TRY to make my KDE mimic some of those
idealogies even today, even though KDE can't quite do it all.
Maybe I'll try Gnome 3 again some time. Perhaps I'm just used to a more traditional desktop.
Gnome 3 is certainly better than Unity ever will be, but for me, KDE
always wins. Cinnamon has burned me more than Gnome 3 ever has.
I think I've sometimes confused with Gnome 3 and Unity - For a while I thought they were the same thing. I've used Unity in Ubuntu, and I'm not really keen on it.
I think there might be some wires crossed in a configuration somewhere - Some of your "Confirming Link" replies have migrated to the Pro-Audio board on Dove-Net.
Re: Confirming Link
By: Nightfox to Psi-Jack on Sun Jul 19 2015 11:52 am
I think there might be some wires crossed in a configuration
somewhere - Some of your "Confirming Link" replies have migrated to
the Pro-Audio board on Dove-Net.
Hmmm. Thanks. For for the email as well. I'll check things out.
I hooked in my TEST VM, a clone of my BBS for testing/development, and hooked up QWKNet to hub off my primary BBS, and didn't wipe out the message areas. Somehow it went bat crazy and cross posted a lot of stuff. Still don't know exactly why, though.
Sysop: | Rixter |
---|---|
Location: | Madison,NC |
Users: | 552 |
Nodes: | 10 (0 / 10) |
Uptime: | 20:11:08 |
Calls: | 1,642 |
Files: | 8,748 |
Messages: | 19,632 |